Willem
Wednesday, 31 August 2016 10:32

Carpetwork

Wednesday, 31 August 2016 09:09

Miser's Purse

A miser's purge is a long and almost stocking-like tube of cloth, closed at both ends, with an opening in the middle, and squeezed through two (gold or silver coloured) rings (called the sliders), which were used to keep the coins in place and separate them.

Wednesday, 31 August 2016 08:28

Work Bag

In eighteenth and nineteenth century England, ladies often carried a work bag that contained the basic tools and materials for fancy-work (more precisely known as fancy needlework), often including a housewife.

Wednesday, 24 August 2016 14:17

Knotting

Knotting is an old technique, especially popular among ladies of leisure in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. The term is synonymous with stringwork

Wednesday, 24 August 2016 13:02

English Work

The collection of the British Museum, London, includes an embroidery from Dunhuang, Gansu province, China, that depicts 'Sakyamuni preaching on the Vulture Peak' and dates to about the eighth century AD. The panel measures 241 x 159 cm. It is worked in split stitch being passed through the plain silk weave and the hemp backing. 

Sunday, 21 August 2016 06:34

Embroidered Buddha figure (China)

The British Museum in London houses a textile fragment with the embroidered figure of a Buddha standing on a lotus pedestal. The fragment dates to the eighth or ninth century AD, and was recovered between 1906-1908 by Sir Aurel Stein at Dunhuang, in Gansu Province, China. The fragment measures 10.9 x 6.2 cm.

Wednesday, 17 August 2016 17:56

Embroidered Thangka (Inner Mongolia)

The collection of the Victoria and Albert Museum in London includes an embroidered thangka that probably derives from Inner Mongolia and dates to the period c. 1780-1850. The thangka has a silk ground material and embroidery worked with silk thread. There are some traces of painting.

Saturday, 13 August 2016 16:52

Ottoman Purse

The Rijksmuseum Amsterdam houses a small Ottoman purse (20 x 9 cm) that appears to have belonged, according to a letter that was inside the purse, to the grand vizier [Kara Mustafa] of the Ottoman Empire during the siege of Vienna in 1683. The purse is made of red satin and decorated with floral motifs embroidered with gold and silver thread

Saturday, 13 August 2016 14:20

Naqsh Embroidery (Iran)

Naqsh work is one of the most famous and striking forms of Iranian embroidery, and was popular in the late eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. It is characterised by its diagonal bands and patterns of very densely worked stitching. The embroidery was especially used for panels that were sewn onto garments, in particular the lower legs of women's voluminous trousers.

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